Annotation:Young Edward

Find traditional instrumental music
Revision as of 14:48, 6 May 2019 by WikiSysop (talk | contribs) (Text replacement - "garamond, serif" to "sans-serif")

Back to Young Edward


YOUNG EDWARD. AKA and see "Lonesome John." Old-Time, Air (whole time). A Major. AEae or EBEB tuning (fiddle). Played as a moderately paced listening tune up to breakdown speed. "Young Edward," from Knott County, Kentucky, World War I veteran and fiddler Hiram Stamper [1], is derived from the air to “Drunkard’s Dream (The),” a ballad whose first line is:

Hiram Stamper (1893-1992)

Young Edward you look so handsome now,

Stamper himself sang the following couplet (but could not remember any more of the lyric), for Bruce Greene:

I dreamed I staggered home one night,
Through dark and dismal gloom.
I missed my wife where could she be?
And strangers filled the room.

Source for notated version:

Printed sources:

Recorded sources: Crooked Jades – “Seven Sisters.” Shanachie Records, Gerry Milnes & Lorraine Lee Hammond – “Hell Up Coal Holler” (learned from Hiram Stamper). June Appal JA-087, Charlie Stamper – "Glory to the Meeting House" (2014). Shanachie 6040, Gerry Milnes & Lorraine Lee Hammond – “Hell Up Coal Holler” (1999. Learned from the playing of Hiram Stamper). YODEL-071-CD, Christian Wig - "Chadwell's Station: Fiddling on the Frontier" (). Bruce Greene - "Five Miles of Ellum Wood."

See also listing at:
Hear Bruce Greene's 1977 field recording of Hiram Stamper playing the tune at Berea Digital Content [2] and the Digital Library of Appalachia [3]
See/hear Hiram's son Charlie Stamper play his version of his father's tune on youtube.com [4]




Back to Young Edward